As of 7PM EST there are no listings from TV Guide. Numerous people have opened tickets with Geniatech over the past few days with response of "we're working on it."
Time to move on. I love the HDHomeRun for OTA that is accessible from numerous devices so will stick with their hardware but will be trying other software that supports Mac OS.

We fully support Mac with the HDHomeRun DVR and the HDHomeRun app for Mac.

The HDHomeRun DVR guide is $35/year.

Nick

The problem is, Nick, and I say this as someone who loves your hardware, that your SW is garbage. Or to put it more kindly, your software solves a very different problem from the problem EyeTV solves.

HDHomeRun SW appears to be a solution for people whose PRIMARY task is wanting to watch LiveTV, with all that entails. The display is all about live TV, the channel overview is lots of pictures. NOTHING about it suggests the sort of useful automatic functionality *I* care about.

EyeTV is (was...) all about RECORDING. The grid is text-based -- more info density. There's lots of automation (smart guides and suchlike). EyeTV makes it very easy to set up your device so that all your favorites just record automatically day after day and you have an (again easy to browse) perpetual pool of content available. There is no hunting through a sea of images, there's no constant manual recording.

More generally your web pages do nothing to impress me that you care about user efficiency.
Do your support a remote control in any form? Not that I can see.
Do you support ANY sort of text-based control of what I see when I try to program a DVR? Basically (you're) as far as can tell, optimized for "search" (I know what I want) or channel-flipping, but are essentially useless for "what's NEW in prime-time --- and I only care about primetime because anything new that's good appears there"?

Instead you talk about a ton of ways in which you are a slightly better version of the crap that is a TV-mindset DVR. I don't WANT a TV-mindset DRV, I want a COMPUTER-mindset DVR...

And it doesn't help that you appear to offer no way to TRY the DVR service without paying the annual fee. All I can do is look at the live experience (which seems a million miles from what I want) and conclude that the DVR services is probably absolutely AWFUL, useless for my needs...

(Not to be mean here, as I say. But maybe reading and thinking about this, you can grow your product. Selling to people who are mostly happy with a cable-type DVR experience is unlikely to result in much growth --- people like that can already get a low-effort cable-TV DVR experience from their cable company! If they want more in various ways, their natural choice is something like a Roku or an Apple TV.
Your natural customer is the computer-first person, the text-first person... )

Wat we need is a smart recording system and not one for live viewing. So either something like EyeTV (great product, lousy developer) or TVHeadend.

Only presently available product that does that is TV-Mosaic. Very good developer, quick replies but the product is (compared to the other 2) limited and looks outdated.

Have you looked at Channels DVR ?

I did - it solved every HDHR UI issue immediately.
8 bucks a month, but does what I need - and that's worth it to me.
(unfortunately/fortunately I still have that 'year' of HDHR-DVR, but maybe my $35 bucks will help pay for that guy that's going to fix HDHR's UI Problem and in that case... go with God (with my money) and peace be with you)

The first month is free - if that 'Demo' period didn't work out - cancel.

Of course, there's always the *possibility that HDHR will completely change course in a magnum overhaul of everything they hold dear.
(*slight, but possible. See: 'Not any time soon' in English Literature)...

The problem with these discussions of a replacement to EyeTV is that people have different needs and EyeTV met most of them. A live TV watching, channel surfing, streaming, scheduling, archiving, mobile, performance, picture quality, ease of use, and stuff that's not even on my radar but is needed for others. So when one person says they found a solution it probably doesn't work for the next as one of the key pieces is missing for them.

I'm seeing this as I try out different programs and every one has their supporters because it works for them even as it doesn't do what I want. An example here: HDHomeRun is great on a Mac for just turning on to quickly watch a single channel but on the other end the developers are adamant that it doesn't needs a guide.

In my opinion (no strings attached) is TV-Mosaic the product that best covers all function of EyeTV.

Both have Live TV, DVR, extensive scheduling and more.

EyeTV greatest limitation is that it staring v7520 no longer supports HDHomerun and only their own devices, TVMosaic does support HDHR and a limited number of USB devices.
EyeTV had virtually no support (just like Elgato did not have) and TV-Mosaic had good and fast support.
Questionable is whether there will be an EyeTV in 64-bit version, TV-Mosaic is 64-bit.
EyeTV is quite expensive € 75,=, TV-Mosaic is € 25,= and has rebates on major updates.
EyeTV only rund on Mav, TV-Mosaic runs on a wide variety of platforms.

I'd very much like to discuss the differences between the HDHomeRun app and EyeTV with any EyeTV users in a less formal setting, like on the phone or via live chat with the goal of seeing where the HDHomeRun app could better fit your needs. If any EyeTV users are interested in chatting, feel free to send me a DM. Or if you can't, say so here, and I'll message you.

I used to use EyeTV long ago. A lot of EyeTV users tend to keep a TV window open on the desktop while they are working on other things. They may not even mention that to you, Nate, as they assume that's how everyone wants to use a DVR. (Not me.)